General Information
According to David Robinson from "The Colonial Williamsburg Journal," most toys and games from the Colonial Era didn't come from stores or factories. Instead, kids made toys at home themselves, such as figures carved from wood, dolls made from scraps, or games made up on the spot. Puritan parents often considered play a waste of time for all but the youngest children. Boys and girls usually went to work on the farm, the shop or around the house at the age of seven and didn't have a lot of free time. But they often made games out of their chores, like contests to see who could carry the most wood or races to carry the eggs in from the hen house without breaking them. Families usually had six or seven children, so there was always someone to play with.
Girls' Toys
Girls in Colonial times, just like girls today, enjoyed playing with dolls. The luckiest girls might receive a wooden doll with a wax face and glass eyes wearing a fashionable silk dress. Other girls made dresses from cornhusks like their Native American counterparts, and sewed doll clothes from scraps of fabric found around the house. Miniature kitchens emerged in the 18th century to help girls learn to cook, according to Robinson. Early American girls also played with tea sets and jump ropes.
Other Toys
Robinson writes that boys learned at a young age to whittle popguns and other toys from sticks. Colonial kids also played with kites, marbles, rattles, tops, stilts, tin drums and rocking horses. Other activities included cat's cradle and ball-in-cup. Barbara Buckwald from the Pencader Heritage Museum writes that children also played board games together, such as Nine Man's Morrice, a combination of tic-tac-toe and checkers.
Games
A popular kids' game during Colonial times was "Rolling the Hoop," which involved standing up an iron or wooden hoop, whacking it with a stick and seeing how far you can keep it rolling. Robinson writes that older boys often stuffed a leather bladder with straw or feathers and kicked it around, a game came to be called "foot ball," by the end of the 18th century. In the winter, kids enjoyed riding sleds with beef bone runners, as well as playing tag in the snow, also known as "pickadill." Robinson describes a game called honey pots in which two kids make a seat for a third by grabbing their left wrist with their right hand, then each holding the other's right wrist. They then run around, trying not to drop their passenger. Kids played hopscotch then as they do today, with the pattern of rectangles scratched in the dirt instead of drawn on a sidewalk. Other Colonial games still played today include bowling, tag, hide-and-seek, leapfrog and Blind Man's Bluff, according to Buckwald.